The Flag of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations or the ASEAN Flag[2] is one of the official symbols of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).[3] It consists of the official emblem of ASEAN on a blue background.
The ASEAN Flag | |
Use | Civil flag and ensign |
---|---|
Proportion | 2:3 |
Adopted | 31 May 1997[1] |
Design | The ASEAN Emblem on a blue background. |
Design
editConstruction
editSet upon a blue background, ten paddy or rice stalks are drawn in the middle of a red circle with white circumference.
The colours of the flag are specified as follows:
Scheme | Blue | Red | Yellow | White |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pantone | Pantone 286 | Pantone Red 032 | Pantone Process Yellow | |
RGB | 34-85-158 | 227-49-49 | 248-244-0 | 255-255-255 |
Hex | #22559E
|
#E33131
|
#F8F400
|
#FFFFFF
|
CMYK | 100, 60, 0, 6 | 0, 91, 87, 0 | 0, 0, 100, 0 | 0, 0, 0, 0 |
The ratio of width to length of the flag is 2:3. The ASEAN Charter includes size specifications for usage of the flag:[4]
- Table flag: 10 cm x 15 cm
- Room flag: 100 cm x 150 cm
- Car flag: 20 cm x 30 cm
- Field flag: 200 cm x 300 cm
Symbolism
editThe official symbolism of the flag is detailed in the ASEAN Charter.
The colours of the flag – blue, red, white, and yellow – represent the main colours of the national flags of all ten ASEAN member states.[4] Blue represents peace and stability, red represents courage and dynamism, white represents purity, and yellow represents prosperity.[4]
The stalks of rice represent the dream of ASEAN's Founding Fathers for an ASEAN comprising all the countries in Southeast Asia bound together in friendship and solidarity. The number of stalks symbolize ASEAN's ten members[5]
The circle represents the unity of ASEAN.[5]
History
editASEAN's first flag was similar to the current one – it had six paddy stalks representing the five founding members (Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Singapore, and Thailand), plus Brunei Darussalam (joined on 7 January 1984) and the word ASEAN written under the stalks. The background was white instead of blue, the border of the circle along with the word ASEAN was cyan, and the circle was bright yellow. The stalks themselves were golden brownish in colour.
References
edit- ^ "International Organizations A-L". www.worldstatesmen.org. Retrieved 18 March 2023.
- ^ "ASEAN Flag". ASEAN Main Portal. ASEAN. Retrieved 26 May 2024.
- ^ Flags of the world
- ^ a b c ASEAN Charter
- ^ a b "Annex 3 – ASEAN FLAG" (PDF). ASEAN.
External links
edit- ASEAN – Official description of the flag
- ASEAN Charter
- Flag of the World – Description at FotW along with history